A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal
Widening Teachers' Reading Repertoires: Moving beyond a Popular Childhood Canon
Authors: Cremin Teresa, Mukherjee Sarah Jane, Aerila Juli-Anna, Kauppinen Merja, Siipola Mari, Lähteelä Johanna
Publisher: Wiley Periodicals LLC
Publication year: 2024
Journal: Reading Teacher
Volume: 77
Issue: 6
First page : 833
Last page: 841
ISSN: 0034-0561
eISSN: 1936-2714
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1002/trtr.2294
Web address : https://ila.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/trtr.2294
Self-archived copy’s web address: https://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/386893271
To develop a love of reading in the young, teachers need rich repertoires of children's literature and other texts. However, the significance of this subject knowledge is rarely given the attention it deserves in policy, practice, or training contexts. This article, drawing on survey data from England and Finland, underlines these concerns. It reveals that in line with the surveys of practicing teachers, preservice teachers in the study also rely upon a narrow range of high-profile authors, mainly from childhood, and that these very distinctly lack diversity. The authors reflect on the reasons for professional over-reliance on this popular childhood canon and the potentially constraining consequences for child readers. They present key approaches to enable educators to develop diverse, in-depth literary repertoires and argue for the development of Reading Teachers—informed reading role models who effectively deploy responsibility, rigor, and relevance: the three Rs of reading for pleasure.
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